About our Products

QUALITYWe love art (a lot) and are proud to offer the highest quality fine art reproductions available anywhere. That’s right – anywhere. From the inks and papers we use all the way to the care we take in packaging every order for shipment, our obsession with quality has no end.

SELECTIONWith many exclusive collections, our product offering of fine art prints, digital posters, and canvas art reproductions is as extensive and diverse as you will find anywhere. That’s right – anywhere. Our curated line contains imagery for all of your decor and design needs.

CUSTOMIZATIONYou have found the perfect art. Now what? Using our innovative custom framing tool you can preview exactly what your finished and framed art will look like. There is no better way to tell your art that you love it (a lot) than by wrapping it up in a custom frame.

Biography

WINSLOW HOMER
1836-1910, American landscape, marine, and genre painter. Homer was born in Boston, where he later worked as a lithographer and illustrator. In 1861 he was sent to the battlefront as correspondent for Harper's Weekly, his work winning international acclaim. Many of his postwar studies of everyday life, such as Crack the Whip (Metropolitan Mus.), date from this period, during which he was a popular magazine illustrator. In 1876, Homer abandoned illustration to devote himself to painting. He found his inspiration in the American scene and, eventually, in the sea, which he painted at Prouts Neck, Maine, in the summer and in Florida or the Bahamas in the winter. His oils and watercolors alike are characterized by their directness, realism, objectivity, and splendid color. But it is above all as a watercolorist that Homer excelled.

After 1884 he lived the life of a recluse. His powerful and dramatic interpretations of the sea in watercolor have never been surpassed and hold a unique place in American art. They are in leading museums throughout the United States. Characteristic watercolors are Breaking Storm and Maine Coast (both: Art Inst. of Chicago) and The Hurricane (Metropolitan Mus.). Characteristic oils include The Gulf Stream (1899) and Moonlight-Wood's Island Light (both: Metropolitan Mus.), and Eight Bells (1886; Addison Gall., Andover, Mass.).